- Home
- Publications
- Has Performance Pay Increased Wage Inequality In Britain?
Has Performance Pay Increased Wage Inequality in Britain?


Using data from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) we show performance pay (PP) increased earnings dispersion among men and women, and to a lesser extent among full-time working women, in the decade of economic growth which ended with the recession of 2008. PP was also associated with some compression in the lower half of the wage distribution for women. The effects were predominantly associated with a broad measure of PP that included bonuses. However, these effects were modest and there is no indication that PP became increasingly prevalent, as some had predicted, over the decade prior to recession.
Related Blog Posts

Will Wage Inflation Become a Concern for the UK in 2023?
Paula Bejarano Carbo
Stephen Millard
23 Jan 2023
7 min read

Exploring the Role of Public Sector Pay Review Bodies
Peter Dolton
Adrian Pabst
16 Jan 2023
5 min read


How Can We Improve the Progression Opportunities of Women Over 50 in the Workplace in Scotland?
Katharine Stockland
19 Jul 2022
5 min read
Related Projects
Related News


Press Release: Compositional effects push up average weekly earnings at the end of 2020
26 Jan 2021
2 min read

Press Release: 2020 shaping up to be the worst year for total pay growth since 2009
15 Dec 2020
2 min read

Press Release: Recovery in average weekly earnings to stall despite hopes for a new vaccine
10 Nov 2020
2 min read
Related Publications

Labour Regulation and Productivity in the UK since 1945: Debunking Myths about ‘Disease’, ‘Miracles’ and ‘Puzzles’
16 May 2023
National Institute Economic Review



Vertical and Horizontal Mismatch in the UK: Are Graduates’ Skills a Good Fit for Their Jobs?
21 Mar 2023
Discussion Papers
Related events

Improving the Recruitment of Older Workers

